Mongolia Issued Warning For Snowstorms

ULAN BATOR – Mongolia’s National Agency for Meteorology and Environmental Monitoring, today issued a warning of heavy snow and snowstorms.

 

As of this morning, the western provinces of Bayan-Ulgii, Uvs and Govi-Altai, the northern provinces of Khuvsgul and Selenge, and the central areas of Tuv province and the national capital, Ulan Bator, have seen 1-20 cm of snow, the weather monitoring agency said, adding that, the snowstorms are reducing visibility.

 

The volatile weather is expected to continue across large parts of the country in the coming days, it said, urging drivers and nomadic herders, to take extra precautions against possible disasters.

 

 

Source: Nam News Network

China Passes New Women’s Protection Law, Revamped for First Time in Decades

China passed legislation on Sunday aimed at giving women more protection against gender discrimination and sexual harassment, days after the bill was submitted to the country’s top legislature after a third revision and extensive public input.

The legislation comes as activists have expressed concern about increasing government rhetoric on the value of traditional women’s roles, and what some see as setbacks for women’s rights and more restrictive attitudes towards abortion.

It’s not yet clear to what extent those more conservative attitudes will be reflected in the new law. No details on the legislation beyond its adoption were immediately available.

It is the first time in nearly 30 years that the law on women’s protection was changed. Titled “Women’s Rights and Interests Protection Law,” the bill was submitted to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC) on Thursday. The NPC announced the legislation had passed on its website.

Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC) on Thursday. The NPC announced the legislation had passed on its website.

Tens of thousands of people had sent in suggestions for what wanted to see in the legislation, the NPC said on its website.

Official news agency Xinhua said on Thursday that the legislation “strengthens the protection of the rights and interests of disadvantaged groups such as poor women, elderly women, and disabled women.”

According to Xinhua, employers will be held to account if women’s labor and social security rights and interests are violated, while obstructing the rescue of trafficked and kidnapped women will be specified as an offence.

The responsibility of local authorities to rescue trafficked and abducted women will also be set out, Xinhua said.

Images posted online early this year of a woman in chains caused outrage and stirred debate about the handling of human trafficking, particularly in rural areas where the issue has been documented for years.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Philippine Storm Victims Feared Tsunami, Ran Toward Mudslide

Victims of a huge mudslide set off by a storm in a coastal Philippine village that had once been devastated by a killer tsunami mistakenly thought a tidal wave was coming and ran to higher ground where they were buried alive by the boulder-laden deluge, an official said Sunday.

At least 18 bodies, including those of children, have been dug out by rescuers in the vast muddy mound that now covers much of Kusiong village in southern Maguindanao province, among the hardest-hit by Tropical Storm Nalgae, which blew out of the northwestern Philippines early Sunday.

Officials fear 80 to 100 more people, including entire families, may have been buried by the deluge or washed away by flash floods in Kusiong between Thursday night and early Friday, according to Naguib Sinarimbo, the interior minister for a Muslim autonomous region run by former separatist guerrillas.


Nalgae, which had a vast rain band, left at least 61 people dead in eight provinces and one city in the Philippine archipelago, including in Kusiong, and a trail of destruction in one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries.

The catastrophe in Kusiong, populated mostly by the Teduray ethnic minority group, was particularly tragic because its more than 2,000 villagers have carried out disaster-preparedness drills every year for decades to brace for a tsunami because of a deadly history. But they were not as prepared for the dangers that could come from Mount Minandar, where their village lies at the foothills, Sinarimbo said.

“When the people heard the warning bells, they ran up and gathered in a church on a high ground,” Sinarimbo told The Associated Press, citing accounts by Kusiong villagers.

“The problem was, it was not a tsunami that inundated them but a big volume of water and mud that came down from the mountain,” he said.

In August 1976, an 8.1-magnitude earthquake and a tsunami in the Moro Gulf that struck around midnight left thousands of people dead and devastated coastal provinces in one of the deadliest natural disasters in Philippine history.

Lying between the Moro Gulf and 446-meter Mount Minandar, Kusiong was among the hardest hit by the 1976 catastrophe. The village never forgot the tragedy. Elderly villagers who survived the tsunami and powerful earthquake passed on the nightmarish story to their children, warning them to be prepared.

“Every year, they hold drills to brace for a tsunami. Somebody was assigned to bang the alarm bells and they designated high grounds where people should run to,” Sinarimbo said. “Villagers were even taught the sound of an approaching big wave based on the recollection of the tsunami survivors.”

“But there wasn’t as much focus on the geo-hazards on the mountainside,” he said.

Bulldozers, backhoes and payloaders were brought to Kusiong on Saturday with more than 100 rescuers from the army, police and volunteers from other provinces, but they were unable to dig at a spot where survivors said the church lay underneath because the muddy mound was still dangerously soft, officials said.

The national disaster-response agency reported 22 missing from the storm’s onslaught in several provinces. Sinarimbo said many of the missing in Kusiong were not included in the government’s official tally because entire families may have been buried and no member was left to provide names and details to authorities.

Army Lt. Col. Dennis Almorato, who went to the mudslide-hit community Saturday, said the muddy deluge buried about 60 rural houses in about 5 hectares of the community.

He gave no estimate of how many villagers may have been buried but described the extent of the mudslide as “overwhelming” and said the nighttime disaster may have unfolded fast.

A regional army commander, Major Gen. Roy Galido, has been ordered to lead an emergency command center to head search and retrieval work in Kusiong, officials said.

The stormy weather in a large swath of the country prompted the coast guard to prohibit sea travel in dangerously rough seas as millions of Filipinos planned to travel over a long weekend for visits to relatives’ tombs and for family reunions on All Saints’ Day in the largely Roman Catholic nation.

More than 100 domestic and international flights were canceled, Manila’s international airport was briefly closed amid stormy weather and sea voyages in storm-whipped seas were prohibited by the coast guard, stranding thousands of passengers.

Floodwaters swamped many provinces and cities, trapping some people on their roofs, and more than 700 houses were damaged. More than 168,000 people fled to evacuation camps. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. expressed disappointment over the high casualty toll in a televised meeting with disaster-mitigation officials Saturday.

“We should have done better,” Marcos Jr. said. “We were not able to anticipate that the volume of water will be that much so we were not able to warn the people and then to evacuate them out of the way of the incoming flash floods.”

About 20 typhoons and storms batter the Philippine archipelago each year. It is located on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” a region along most of the Pacific Ocean rim where many volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur, making the nation one of the world’s most disaster-prone.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Itaewon: An Inclusive, Multicultural Hub Hit With Tragedy

Itaewon, the neighborhood where at least 151 people were killed in a Halloween crowd surge, is Seoul’s most cosmopolitan district, a place where kebab stands and BBQ joints are as big a draw as the pulsing night clubs and trendy bars.

Wedged between two of the city’s biggest parks and the War Memorial of Korea museum, Itaewon has long been popular among foreign residents and tourists, thanks in large part to a major U.S. military base that was once nearby. The area’s nightlife is mostly centered on one main road.

In recent years, the days around Halloween have seen Itaewon’s lively streets filled with partygoers — expat and Korean alike — dressed up in holiday costumes. Those festivities continued even during the pandemic, which temporarily dampened Itaewon’s nightlife after several cases were traced to the area’s nightclubs and other venues.

Officials believe that tens of thousands of revelers flocked to Itaewon on Saturday, in one of the biggest gatherings since the country removed most of its COVID-19 restrictions in recent months. Witnesses say the streets were so densely clogged with people and slow-moving vehicles that it was practically impossible for emergency workers and ambulances to arrive in time, leaving them helpless to prevent the situation from developing into the country’s worst disaster in years.

On Saturday night, emergency workers were seen rushing to carry the injured and dead out in stretchers as ambulances lined up in the streets and a chaotic crowd fled the area. Paramedics and pedestrians frantically performed CPR on people in the streets near rows of lifeless bodies kept under blue blankets.

Park Ji-won, who runs a Middle Eastern restaurant across the street from the Hamilton Hotel, said he saw emergency workers bring out people in stretchers among the huge throngs of crowds as he closed his restaurant around 11 p.m. He had no idea what had just happened.

“I just presumed a fight broke out — in my 10-plus years of doing business here, I only saw ambulances when people got assaulted or when there were fires,” Park said.

He said he was “extremely shocked” when he got home and watched the news, which was when the death toll was at a dozen. “But then the death toll kept growing until it became 151,” he said.

Park said Itaewon always had large Halloween crowds, even during raging COVID-19 infections last year. He said shop owners like him usually avoid the narrow alley beside the Hamilton Hotel during holiday festivities, because “once you go there, you cannot move or get out.”

For some people, it was the contrast between the normally lively, fun neighborhood and the mass death that was most striking.

“People were wearing Halloween costumes, so the scene was so unrealistic,” said an official at an Itaewon tourism organization who rushed to the scene to try to help. She requested anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the incident.

While there’s not widespread Western-style trick-or-treat activities in South Korea, Halloween-themed parties and events have become increasingly popular among young South Koreans, and Itaewon is the country’s hottest spot for such events, where bars, clubs and restaurants hold costume competitions.

Itaewon’s international character was shaped by its proximity to a U.S. military garrison nearby. The area is still home to restaurants, bars and other businesses catering to the American community in Seoul.

The Yongsan Garrison, which served as the headquarters for the U.S. Forces Korea and the United Nations Command until 2017, is less than a mile away from Itaewon.

The U.S. forces have since relocated their South Korean headquarters to Pyeongtaek, a city 70 kilometers (45 miles) south of Seoul, leaving only a small contingent in Yongsan while beginning to hand over the land to the South Korean government.

Even after losing most of its American military customers, Itaewon has remained a major attraction for both South Koreans and foreign visitors, who are drawn to the district’s buzzing and boozy nightlife as well as its international flair. Restaurants serving American barbecue and Middle Eastern kebabs sit alongside Irish pubs and traditional Japanese-style bars.

“The Itaewon community has opened its arms to us for many years and is part of the reason our Alliance is so strong,” U.S. Forces Korea, which commands the nearly 30,000 American military personnel in the country, said in an online statement, written in English and Korean. ” During this time of grief, we will be there for you just as you have been there for us.”

The epicenter of the disaster appeared to be on a cramped, sloping alley running along the western side of the Hamilton Hotel, where some witnesses say people fell and toppled over one another like “dominoes.” The brick hotel and its adjacent shopping center are a well-known landmark in the area.

The lane would have left those seeking shelter with few options. One side is occupied by the mostly solid wall of the hotel. The other is lined with a handful of small storefronts, including bars, a small retail shop and a branch of the Emart24 convenience store chain.

The alley itself is on an incline that leads to one of the entrances to the busy Itaewon subway station, making it harder for revelers to maintain their footing as the crowd surged. The block-long alley links the main road with another narrow strip packed with bars and trendy restaurants.

One witness told local TV station YTN that he saw both foreigners and Koreans who’d been killed and seemed amazed as the neighborhood filled with police vehicles and ambulances trying to help the injured and dying.

“It was like an abyss,” said the man, who gave his name as Hwang Min-hyuk.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Witnesses: Revelers Stacked ‘Like Dominoes’ Inside South Korean Crush

In one moment, thousands of Halloween revelers crammed into the narrow, vibrant streets of Seoul’s most cosmopolitan neighborhood, eager to show off their capes, wizard hats and bat wings.

In the next, panic spread as an unmanageable mass of people jammed into a narrow alley in Itaewon. Toppled revelers stacked on one another “like dominoes” in a chaotic crush so intense that clothes were ripped off.

A stunned Seoul was just beginning on Monday to put together the huge scope of the crowd surge that killed mostly people in their 20s and 30s, including foreign nationals, on Saturday night. As of Sunday evening, officials put the death toll at 153 and the number of injured people at 133. The Ministry of the Interior and Safety said it expected the death toll to rise on account of the number of injured people in serious conditions.

Witnesses say the nightmarish scene intensified as people performed CPR on the dying and carried limp bodies to ambulances, while dance music pulsed from garish clubs lit in bright neon. Others tried desperately to pull out those who were trapped underneath the crush of people but failed because too many in the crowd had fallen on top of them.

Some people were unable to move at all for 40 minutes.

“We were just stuck together so tightly we couldn’t even shift to call out and report the situation,” said one witness, surnamed Lee. “We were strangers, but we held each others’ hands and repeatedly shouted out, ‘Let’s survive!'”

Kim Mi Sung, a witness who works for a non-profit organization in Itaewon, told The Associated Press that nine out of the 10 people she gave CPR to eventually died. Many were bleeding from their noses and mouths. Most were women dressed as witches or were in other Halloween costumes; two were foreigners.

“It was like a hell,” Kim said. “I still can’t believe what happened.”


In this ultra-wired, high-tech country, anguish, terror and grief — as well as many of the details of what happened — are playing out most vividly on social media. Users posted messages desperately seeking friends and loved ones, as witnesses and survivors described what they went through.

“I thought I was dying,” one woman said in posts on Twitter. “My entire body was stuck among everyone else, while people laughed from a terrace and videotaped us. I thought I would really die if I cried out. I stretched my hands out to (others) who were above me and I managed to get out.”

An unidentified female witness in her 20s wept as she described the scene to the Yonhap news agency: “It looked like the graves of people piled upon one another. Some of them were slowly losing consciousness and others seemed to have already died.”

A male witness, surnamed Kong, said he managed to escape to a nearby bar with his friends after the crush happened. He saw through the bar windows that people were falling on top of each other “like dominoes,” Yonhap reported.


Friends and family members gathered at a local government office to try to find news about the missing.

“I haven’t heard from my child. How can I sleep when my child hasn’t returned home?” an unidentified woman said, according to footage from Yonhap News TV.

One Twitter user posted a series of messages asking for information about a 17-year-old friend who had gone to Itaewon to celebrate wearing a hairband that looked like cat ears.

“I lost contact with her. She’s been a friend of mine for 12 years, and we were like family. Please help me,” the message said.

Even after the crush, some witnesses said they saw some revelers not immediately making way for emergency vehicles, rescuers and police officers. One viral video clip on Twitter showing a crowd of young people dancing and singing near the carnage drew several insults from South Koreans.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

WELCOME ADDRESS BY DR JANIL PUTHUCHEARY, SENIOR MINISTER OF STATE, MINISTRY OF HEALTH, AT THE NHG22 WALK.RUN.CYCLE MOVEMENT PHYSICAL FINALE EVENT

Mr Tan Tee How

Chairman, National Healthcare Group (NHG)

 

Professor Philip Choo

Group CEO, NHG

 

Ladies and gentlemen,

 

  1. Good morning! I am delighted to join you here today. For many of you, this is not just a milestone event for NHG, but a personal milestone. It marks the successful completion of your commitment to walk, run or cycle 50 kilometres over the past three months. As of today, collectively, together, you have clocked an impressive 85,000km. You deserve a big round of applause for yourselves.

 

  1. The initial target was set at 2,200 km, in celebration of National Healthcare Group’s 22ndanniversary. I think that itself deserves some congratulations. NHG has for over two decades been delivering quality healthcare, investing in medical research, piloting innovative care models in close collaboration with partners, patients and caregivers, as well as developing our pipeline for the future healthcare workers of Singapore. Thank you for your significant contributions to Singapore’s healthcare landscape over all these years.

 

  1. This Walk.Run.Cycle Movement is an important and creative approach to empower individuals to lead active and healthy lives. Let me just talk a little bit about what I see as the elements of its success.

 

Nudging Towards an Active Lifestyle

 

  1. First, you use a bundle of nudges to help participants get active. You register for the challenge, and as a participant, you commit to exercising regularly. You are setting clear goals for yourself of completing 50 kilometres across three months, and you have a visual indication of your progress on your fitness app. This allows you to plan your exercise sessions and some participants can break down the sessions into manageable targets, walking 500 metres at a time, or if you are feeling like you can challenge yourself, you can set yourself a much larger target. The prospect of receiving a Finisher Medal also helps to incentivise many participants to complete the 50km challenge!

 

  1. Nudging the residents towards a healthier lifestyle habit is very much central to what we are planning to do with our Healthier SG strategy. We want to encourage our residents to co-develop a Health Plan together with their family doctor, commit to actions that can help them achieve specific health goals, such as participating in physical activity programmes like the National Steps Challenge, your Walk.Run.Cycle Movement, or adjusting their diets.

 

Strengthening Motivation with Social Support 

 

  1. Second factor that I think contributes to the success is that you are able to invite your family members and friends to participate in your Walk.Run.Cycle Movement. You can form teams with colleagues, if you are feeling like you want to be competitive for the races. Peer encouragement is a powerful motivating force. That is why the community is so important to support individuals to achieve better health. NHG’s Communities of Care network, connecting residents to resources in the neighbourhood, exemplifies this idea. With Healthier SG, we are working with partners to provide a wide range of lifestyle programmes that loved ones and friends can enjoy together.

 

  1. We are also empowering you, the healthcare clusters, including NHG, to step up as regional health managers. You will build relationships, coordinate activities, and provide support across our community partners, tailoring programmes specific to the needs of your population. Over time, you will gain an in-depth understanding of your residents’ needs and work with partners to strengthen the environmental and social support for our residents.

 

Achieving Health Goals Using Digital Tools

 

  1. Last, I think of the three factors of success I am going to talk about today is that you leverage digital health tools. You have a virtual challenge where you can use any GPS-enabled fitness tracking device to clock your distances and it is an example, one small example of the important role that we will see for digital health technologies in sustaining healthy behaviours for our population and we hope to leverage such tools even more. So we hope that people don’t have to wait for a Walk.Run.Cycle Movement to challenge themselves. We want people to take charge of their own health, to improve their physical activity level anytime.

 

Closing

 

  1. So to all the participants here, I congratulate you for completing this fitness challenge. This may be a finale event, but I hope it marks the beginning, or a continuation of your health journey! And once again, a special congratulations to all the staff and management of NHG on your 22ndanniversary.

 

  1. I thank you all for joining us here this morning and I hope you will enjoy the rest of the day. Thank you very much.

 

 

Source: Ministry of Health, Singapore